Imagism

The imagism is a Anglo-American poetic movement appeared with London towards 1912 and disappeared after the First World War. The imagists wish to free from the poetic tradition romantic and victorienne by choosing a coloured language, a precise and direct expression. The writer Thomas Ernest Hulme is one of the first to have propagated these ideas in his works. The imagists rejected the typical artifice of many romantic poets of the period victorienne. They were located in opposition to the poets géorgiens much more respectful of the tradition.

The imagists were originating in the the United Kingdom, Ireland and the the United States. Some were women, which was rather not very current at the time. The imagism is the first organized movement of the modern English literature. According to T.S. Eliot: “The benchmark usually regarded as the starting point of modern poetry is the group called imagists in London in 1910. ”

The following writers are considered as imagists:

External bonds

  • Imagists.org
  • The 1915 exit off '' Some Imagist Poets ''
  • The Objectivist Timeline Project
  • Bibliography off Japan in English-Language Pours
  • J.T. Barbarese '' et al. '': " In Station off the Metro" has; at Modern American Poetry

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